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1945 Liberal Party General Election Manifesto

20 Point Manifesto of the Liberal Party

The Liberal Party, having for five years formed part of the All-Party Government, which has
victoriously guided Britain through the dangers of the European war, now appeals with
confidence to the new electorate.

The Liberal Party has no responsibility for forcing an early election and, realising that the
existing register is imperfect and will disfranchise many thousands of voters, was prepared
to continue the Coalition until a new register was ready in October, and had expressed
willingness to discuss its continuation until the end of the Japanese war.

Nevertheless, now that the decision has been taken, we welcome the opportunity of submitting
our programme to the Nation.

1. From Victory to Peace

Victory in Europe has been won, but the war against Japan calls for unremitting effort. The
Liberal Party has pledged itself to support all measures needed to strengthen the arms and
shorten the task of our valiant fighting men in the Far East.

The sacrifice and steadfastness of the people of these Islands, the British Common wealth and
Empire - standing alone for a whole year against the insolent might of Germany and her
Allies - have saved the world. But victory must be a beginning, not an end - the beginning of
a system by which war must be made impossible and through which differences between nations
must be settled by just and peaceful means.

We must strive to preserve the common purpose of the United Nations, who have humbled Germany.
In particular, the close comradeship in war between Britain, Russia and America must be
preserved, fostered and developed in peace. The new World Organisation coming to birth at San
Francisco must be supported and strengthened. Nations, like private citizens, must come to
acknowledge the rule of law and of impartial arbitration in their dealings with each other.
The tasks of peace, like those of war, are too vast for any one nation to accomplish alone.
Much patience and self-control will be called for in harmonising various national interests,
but the war has taught with tragic clearness that no people can survive in selfish isolation.

The nations determined to preserve peace must have sufficient forces, especially in the air,
to crush ruthlessly and immediately any attempt by an aggressive nation to go to war. We
ourselves in this country and the Empire must have adequate strength, provided so long as
necessary by a system of universal service and with the most modern equipment, to con
tribute according to our responsibilities as a World Power.

2. The British Commonwealth

In pursuing this policy we can look with confidence for the sympathy and support of the great
self-governing Dominions. The war has brought them together with us in closer consultation
and combined action than ever before. The Liberal principle which inspired the creation of the
Commonwealth - that of free and independent nations working together in a common loyalty for
a common way of life-must be fostered as an element of stability in the world and a practical
example of the way in which security can be combined with nation al freedom.

The Colonies have proved an invaluable source of strength to us in war. It will be our duty,
as well as our advantage, to help their development in peace. Basing our rule on the
principle of trusteeship, we must consider first the interest of their peoples and encourage
economic development and political self-government in association with the Commonwealth.

It will be the object of the Liberal Party to break the deadlock in India, and to bring about
a reconciliation between the various elements so that Indians themselves may frame a
democratic Constitution for complete self-government for India.

3. Service Men and Women

Victory in total war has been achieved by the common sacrifice of all, by soldiers, sailors
and airmen, and also by those working in the fields, factories, ships, mines and offices,
and by the steadfastness of the women in the home. Nevertheless, our first thought at this
time must be for those who have been fighting in the Services-cut off for many years at a time
from their families,many of them fighting in distant theatres. They have carried the heaviest
burden of all. The Liberal Party recognises its duty to safeguard the interests of the
Servicemen, their wives and families, and especially those of men who are still fighting
against Japan. Our influence has been used and will continue to be used to ensure for them
the fairest possible conditions of release and rehabilitation; of training for civil life, of
gratuities and pensions and of prospects of employment and housing. We are determined to see
that no time is lost in providing homes for men returning from the wars. This is a debt the
nation owes to its warriors and it must be paid in full.

4. Social Security

The Liberal Party is fighting independently of all other parties for a radical programme of
practical reform.

Though there are brains and hands and resources enough in the world, properly used, to give
healthy self-respecting lives to all, mankind is a prey to Fear-fear of poverty and want
through unemployment, sickness, accident and old age. With the Beveridge schemes for Social
Security and Full Employment, the Liberal Party leads a frontal attack on this Fear.

Freedom from Want can be achieved by Social Security-a defence against unmerited misfortune
from sickness, accident or unemployment and from loss of earning power through old age.
Social Security is the economics of the good neighbour, and extends and improves the original
measures of health and unemployment insurance passed by a Liberal Government.

5. Full Employment

Full Employment can be maintained in a Free Society. Where there is work to do and men to do
it, unemployment is an intolerable waste of wealth, and it imperils healthy family life-basis
of the nation's greatness. Our national resources, labour, power and skill of brains,
are our most precious national assets, and Government and private initiative alike must
ensure that none of them stands needlessly idle.

6. HOUSING

There is a house famine in the land, Liberals will not be satisfied until there is a separate
dwelling for each family at a reasonable rent. This can be achieved only by a completely new
approach, applying to housing the same drive as was used to produce aircraft and munitions of
war. The responsibility should be placed on a Minister of Housing and no vested interests can
be allowed to stand in the way. Local authorities must be enabled to borrow at a low rate of
interest, and in no part of the country be allowed to ignore their obligations. Other
agencies who are ready and able to provide houses should be encouraged.

We must control the costs of building materials so as to keep down the prices and rents of the
houses we build.

In the countryside the problem is no less urgent than in the towns. Farm workers and
fishermen must also share in the benefits of good houses equipped with water, power and
sanitation. The next Parliament must drive forward the new housing programme by every
available means.

7. The Land

Great Britain is a small country with a vast population. It is therefore essential that the
best use should be made of its land.

The full development of our national resources; the protection from disfigurement of the
countryside; the balanced location of industry, and a successful housing policy all depend
upon comprehensive measures of Town and Country planning.

Development rights outside built-up areas should immediately be acquired for the public and
there should be a periodic levy on all increases in site values. Every increase in values due
to community action should be secured for the community.

The fullest use must be made of agricultural land for food production. The State should,
subject to the owner's right of appeal to an impartial tribunal, have the right to take
over all land which is badly managed or badly farmed, and any other land which in the
interests of good cultivation and of the population on the land should be in its control.

8. Farming and Fishing

The Liberal Party means to maintain a prosperous and efficient agriculture. The threat of
famine in Europe, and our own reduced capacity to pay for imports, mean that more food must
be produced at home than before the war. To do this, farmers must have the assurance of
stable prices, and the advantage of bulk purchase, and cheap transport. Capital must be
available on easy terms for drainage, improvements and modern equipment, and science and
research must be freely at the disposal of the farming community.

Farmers should be free to cultivate their land according to their own judgement and at their
own risk, subject only to the maintenance of reasonable standards of farming and meeting the
food requirements of the nation.

A prosperous free agriculture demands also the location of light industries in country
districts, providing alternative employment and bringing greater purchasing power to the
rural population. The distribution of industry is of the first importance to the health,
happiness and well-being of our people.

Those who have fought for the country must have an opportunity to live on the land and
cultivate it. Land Settlement must therefore be encouraged.

The Ministry of Food must remain to ensure the fair distribution of available supplies to
consumers, and to offer long-term contracts assuring farmers of fair prices and guaranteed
markets over a period of years.

The wages and housing of farm workers must be comparable with those of skilled workers in
other industries.

The need for maximum production of food calls for a flourishing fishing industry. Government
assistance will be needed in replacing boats and gear and in providing adequate curing and
refrigeration facilities at ports so that fish so badly needed on our tables shall not be
thrown back into the sea.

9. Health

People cannot be happy unless they are healthy. The Liberal aim is a social policy which will
help to conquer disease by prevention as well as cure, through good housing, improved
nutrition, the lifting of strains and worries caused by fear of unemployment, and through
intensified medical research. The Liberal Party's detailed proposals for improved health
services would leave patients free to choose their doctor, for the general practitioner is an
invaluable asset in our social life.

10. Education

Liberals supported the recent Education Act, and will do all they can to bring it quickly
into operation. Our place in the world will depend on the character of our people and on
minds trained to understand and operate the complex technical achievements of the modern
world. We cannot afford to neglect talent which lies unused because of the poverty of
parents. The quality of our teachers must be maintained, but their numbers must be
increased so that the school-leaving age can be raised and the size of classes reduced.
Day nurseries should be increased and the nursery school system greatly expanded.
Playing-fields and opportunities for organised games should be normally provided in all
schools.

11. Industry

British Industry will face new and complex problems after the war. If we are to succeed we
must sell the goods which the world wants at the price which the world will pay. We can do
this only by achieving justice for the three partners in industry-the Manager, the Worker and
the Investor.

Of first importance are the status and remuneration of the worker. He has for too long been
regarded as a "hand". He must become a partner and acquire economic citizenship,
through Works Councils set up by law, and through Joint Industrial Councils in every Trade
Board Industry. Profit-sharing should be encouraged, and information on the conduct and
finance of business should be readily available to assure workers that wages fixed and
profit-sharing schemes in operation are fair and just.

Liberals believe that the controversy for and against nationalisation is out of date. They
approach industrial problems without economic prejudice, and since they represent no vested
interest of employers or employed, they alone can plan in the interests of the whole community.
They believe in private enterprise and the value of individual effort, experiment, and
willingness to take risks. Hence their support of the small trader and their desire to diffuse
ownership as widely as possible. Hence also their opposition to cartels and price- fixing
rings which, often abusing the name of private enterprise, create conditions of monopoly and
hold the community to ransom.

But where public ownership is more economic, Liberals will demand it without hesitation.
Where there is no further expansion or useful competition in an industry or where an industry
or group of industries has become a private monopoly, Liberals say it should be come a public
utility. Liberals believe in the need for both private enterprise and large-scale
organisation under government control, and their tests for deciding which form is necessary
are the service of the public, the efficiency of production and the well-being of those
concerned in the industry in question.

12. Transport and Power

Railways, with the large part of road transport controlled by them, are clearly in effect a
monopoly, and should be treated as a Public Utility on a national plan. Electric power
should also be reorganised as a public utility.

British Civil Aviation must be rapidly expanded both to make consultation and inter course
between all parts of the Commonwealth and Empire swift and easy, and to serve the common
interest of mankind.

13. Coal

Coal is our principal mineral wealth, and most of our industry is based on its use. This fact,
and the variety and immense potential value of by-products from coal, demand in the interests
of the national economy that the Coal Industry shall not be treated merely as a private
profit-making concern. It must be regarded not as one industry among many, but as the key to
the health of our basic industries and our export trade. Compared with other countries, the
British coal-mining industry is inefficient and is losing ground. Since it is apparent that
the necessary increase of efficiency cannot be brought about with the present organisation,
the industry should be a public service, in which the miners can feel that they are working
for the benefit of the whole community. But the terms on which the coal- mining industry is
made into a public-service must be such as to ensure three things:-

(a) Decentralisation of operation and freedom to experiment in different coal
undertakings.

(b) That the industry pays its way without subsidies from the general
tax-payer.

(c) That coal is not made too dear either to industrial or to domestic
consumers.

14. Freedom of Trade

Freedom and expansion of trade are the necessary basis of world prosperity. We can secure the
imports needed to maintain our standard of life only by selling our exports in the markets of
the world. We should therefore press on vigorously with the conclusion of agreements with
America and other countries for the progressive elimination of tariffs, quotas, exchange
restrictions and other barriers to trade, on the lines of Article VII of the Mutual Aid
Agreement between Britain and the United States, which implements the Atlantic Charter.

The traditional policy of the Conservative Party to build up a system of economic isolationism
within the Empire is inconsistent with world co-operation, and with our obligations under
Article VII of the Lease-Lend Agreement. This policy would not commend itself to the great
Dominions; it would be inadequate to maintain the volume of trade needed by Britain, and it
would provoke dangerous economic strife.

15. Taxation

Under the impact of war, ordinary methods of control over expenditure have necessarily been
relaxed. The time has now come for a strict supervision of national expenditure in order to
eliminate waste and to secure a progressive reduction in the burden of taxation, both direct
and indirect. In particular, it will be our aim to remove taxes on the prime necessities of
life.

The system of taxation must be designed to encourage the re-equipment and modernisation of
British industry.

16. Controls

This war has forced us all to accept many controls which cannot be suddenly relaxed without
incurring the dangers of soaring prices and inflation. While Liberals realise this, they are
determined that no control shall remain longer than is absolutely necessary for the welfare of
the country and the full employment of its people.

17. The Work and Position of Women

The family is the basis of our national life. Liberals were the first to demand family
allowances and are determined to secure adequate provision for motherhood and child welfare.
They are also determined that the benefits of modern scientific and mechanical development
shall be used to eliminate needless drudgery in the home.

In public life, the Liberal Party demands for women equality of opportunity and status; it
stands for equal pay for equal work, and for equal opportunity of entry into the public
services.

18. Scotland and Wales

The Liberal Party recognises the desire of the people of Scotland and Wales to assume greater
responsibility in the management of their domestic affairs, and has long been in favour of
suitable measures of Devolution.

The drift of population from those countries to congested cities in England is unhealthy and
should be reversed, by measures for a more balanced distribution of industry throughout these
islands and by the full development of the agricultural, fishing, industrial and power
resources of Scotland and Wales.

19. A Better Parliament

Our present system of voting produces Parliaments which are not representative of the
people's will. A party with a minority of votes can secure a majority in the House of
Commons. Liberals hold that Members of Parliament should be chosen in such a way as to
represent fairly the number of votes cast. They would therefore reform the voting system so
as to give electors the opportunity of expressing an additional choice or choices, as well as
a first choice, when there are more than two candidates for a seat.

In addition, Liberals consider that it is in the interests of democracy that the scales of the
electoral system should not be weighed in favour of wealthy candidates, and that Members of
Parliament should be chosen for their opinions and qualities, not for their interests.
Accordingly, the Liberal Party favours placing the essential costs of elections on the State,
subject to suitable safeguards against frivolous candidatures.

20. The Liberty of the Subject

It is always the task of Liberals to exercise that eternal vigilance which is the price of
freedom. Before the war our Members of Parliament challenged every encroachment upon the
liberty of the subject. When we joined the Coalition in 1940, Sir Archibald Sinclair obtained
a promise from the Prime Minister that it was the Government's intention to preserve in
all essentials a free Parliament and a free Press, and that the Emergency Powers (such as
preventive arrest under Regulation 18b and the power to suppress newspapers) would disappear
with the passing of the emergency.

In the next Parliament, whether in or out of office, we shall continue to do our utmost to
safeguard and enlarge civil liberties. Power must exist in any modern State. But it need not
be arbitrary power. In this country the citizen has two essential safeguards against in justice
and oppression, namely: democratic control, through Parliament and elected local authorities,
over all those in official positions, and the right to appeal to the ordinary Courts of Law
whenever a Minister or an official exceeds his authority. Both these safeguards we shall
strenuously maintain.

To Sum Up

The Liberal Party submits to the nation the vision of a healthier society in which our people
may live full, happy and useful lives and bring up their families in decent homes with out
fear of war or of unemployment. At the same time its programme is also a call to hard,
strenuous work on the part of all, Government and citizens alike. But the war has shown
Britain capable of the task. It has revealed a mighty nation, renewed in its youth, with vast
stores of energy and enterprise. It has the skill, the confidence and the determination; what
is now needed is a Government wise enough and courageous enough to set the pace of advance.

Liberal / SDP / Libdem Manifestos

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Anyone seeking the official site of the UK's Liberal Democrats should go towww.libdems.org.uk